FEIST won the Shortlist Music Prize for her album The Reminder. Finalists for the 2007 Shortlist Music Prize also included Arcade Fire, Burial, Justice, LCD Soundsystem, M.I.A., Spoon, Stars, Wilco and Working for a Nuclear Free City.

KELLEY STOLTZ talks to the East Bay Express about playing and singing almost every note on his new album for Sub Pop: "I try to work every day, whether it's going well or not. It's fun to think up a drumbeat and a bass part and then solve the musical arithmetic problem that creates. It's boring to play guitar all day..." As Pate's Jon Pratt once said, the guitar player always wants to be the drummer. You can stream a bunch of new and old tracks via StoltzSpace. Fans of Harry Nilsson, mid-period Kinks and early Paul McCartney (solo) should check it out.

DEAN & BRITTA talk to the Chicago Tribune's Greg Kot about the transition from Luna and covering new ground on their latest album.

VAMPIRE WEEKEND bassist Chris Baio talks to DC's Express, which notes in passing that the band's breakthrough buzz has stirred debate about musical misappropriation and the tension between upper-class privilege and education and rock music. As to the former, I would note that it was just a few months ago that people were debating whether indie music was too "white."

TWO HOURS TRAFFIC: At Chromewaves, Frank Yang touts the staying power-pop of the Charlottetown combo. He's got plenty of A/V linkage, including an album stream, so I'll just tease it with the new video for "Nighthawks."

HAROLD & MAUDE never had an official soundtrack... until now, courtesy of rock critic turned movie maven Cameron Crowe. And it's a deluxe package on vinyl.

VAN HUNT: The neo-soul man's latest album, "Popular," was scheduled to be released this month on Blue Note Records, but this week the singer announced that he has severed ties with the label, the latest victim of the turmoil at Blue Note's parent company, EMI. Blue Note had already sent pre-release copies of the album to the media for review purposes; an EP previewing tracks from the album is streaming at HuntSpace, sounding funkier than evah.

SUPER FURRY ANIMALS: Gruff Rhys talks to the SF Bay Guardian about the mellower mood that shaped the recording of the band's latest LP, Hey, Venus!

BRADGELINA: Jolie's rumored pregnancy may be more the result of insecurity than love, according to the ever-reliable National Enquirer, which claims she spent the last year terrified that Pitt would end their relationship if she failed to give him another child.

KATHERINE HEIGL and her new hubby, musician Josh Kelley wuz robbed! By a dumb car thief who passed up guitars worth thousands, instead picking up a GPS device worth about a few hundred bucks.

HEATH LEDGER died from an accidental overdose of prescription medications including painkillers, anti-anxiety drugs and sleeping pills, the New York City medical examiner's office said Wednesday. In a statement released through Ledger's publicist, Ledger's father, Kim, said Wednesday: "While no medications were taken in excess, we learned today the combination of doctor-prescribed drugs proved lethal for our boy. Heath's accidental death serves as a caution to the hidden dangers of combining prescription medication, even at low dosage." The Drug Enforcement Administration is stepping in to determine how the actor was able to obtain so many prescription drugs. Baby mama Michelle Williams and her two-year-old daughter arrived in Perth, Australia, Wednesday afternoon local time for Ledger's funeral. There is a rumor that his dead body was snapped, and 300K is the price on that photo.

IRAQ: Bill Ardolino is posting a guide to Iraqi politics, starting with the structure of the executive branch under the Iraqi constitution: "Applied to American politics, such a scenario might look like a Republican president's cabinet divided among Republicans, Democrats, Independents, and Libertarians, roughly proportional to their prevalence in Congress..." Iraqi and UN officials toured a bomb-damaged Shiite shrine in northern Iraq on Wednesday as workers took the first steps in a long-delayed reconstruction - nearly two years after the attack on the famed golden dome became a rallying point for Shiite rage. The US military said videos seized from suspected AQI hideouts show militants training children who appear as young as 10 to kidnap and kill. Here's one of the videos. And here's video of Iraqi Special Forces rescuing an 11-year-old boy who had been kidnapped and held for ransom by a ring of terrorists near Kirkuk.

THIS SHOCKING PICTURE come from the animal park at Xiamen in Fujian, south-east China, where the public seem to delight in humiliating circus-style stunts and have no regard for animal cruelty. More at the link.

PET HOARDING: Apache Junction police found 96 rabbits, 47 dogs, chickens, pigs, goats, horses, an African Grey Parrot and a cockatiel kept in abusive conditions when they responded to a tip Tuesday at a house in a rural area of Arizona.

THE THERMALS did the four free songs thing for Daytrotter, including one previously unreleased.

RICHARD HAWLEY gets an excellent profile/interview in the Times of London: "His songbook, which is fast-tracking him towards national treasure status, celebrates the ordinary and everyday over the aspirational and ersatz, finding romance in little lives and big dreams... Exactly who buys his music was, initially, a puzzle to Mute. That Lady's Bridge reached the Top Ten shows there is no shortage of fans, and Hawley is proud to have confounded conventional marketing demographics..."

THE BOY LEAST LIKELY TO has finished their sophomore album and are hititng the road for a few dates. That's good enough to relink to the charming video that helped grab attention for their debut, "Be Gentle With Me," a song I hear in the ads for the adorable Juno. We got us a puppet theme going today.

FEIST talks to the Associated Press about songwriting advice she got from her sound man, her Grammy nominations and -- of course -- her videos: "The videos are there to make the songs visible, to manifest something audible in a visible way... For me, what better way to do that for a song that's really child-like and joyful than to dance around in a blue-sparkled pantsuit?"

TYLER RAMSEY: The folksy singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist recently invited to join Band of Horses stopped by the World Cafe for a chat and mini-set you can stream on demand via NPR. He was also blurbed recently by Harp magazine.

THE BEATLES: Previously unseen photos from the day The Fab Four first hit No. 1 -- and memories of the day by photographer Michael Ward -- appear at the Times of London. Embedded video also.

ADELE is topping the UK charts this week, but her meteoric rise is stirring all sorts of debate about the British hype machinery. The Independent has not only an overview, but also a round-up of reviews and Andy Gill's lament that her success is "depressingly inevitable." You can stream her album this week via MuchMusic.

JAMIE LYNN SPEARS, Britney's 16-year-old knocked up sister, is leaving mama Lynne to live with dad Jamie in L.A., to be closer to work and to circumvent Lynne's disapproval of baby daddy Casey Aldridge.

HEATH LEDGER: Autopsy results in the 28-year-old actor's January 22 death should be available within the next 24 hours or so.

LINDSAY LOHAN is opening up to Glamour magazine about her party-girl image, getting back to work and how she's ridding her life of bad influences. Of course, "That's not to say I'll never go to a club again, because I'd be lying." Well, yeah, given that you have been caught plain falling off the wagon several times already. Lohan talks about some of her old and new bad habits in the March issue of Harper's Bazzar. Also, it seems Li-Lo has visited the trout pout shop again.

THE McCARTNEYS: Next Monday, Heather Mills is set to cross-examine Sir Paul in a courtroom showdown to win a hefty slice of his £825 million fortune. Literally. Mills has apparently spent so much of the interim money she already received that she plans to represent herself in the five-day High Court battle next week - giving her the opportunity to grill 65-year-old Sir Paul. There is an old saying about people who represent themselves having a fool as a client that is appropos here.

VANITY FAIR issues its annual Hollywood issue nationwide February 12, but you can see, the cover and the gatefold now. Emily Blunt, Amy Adams, Jessica Biel, Anne Hathaway, Alice Braga, Ellen Page, Zoë Saldana, Elizabeth Banks, Ginnifer Goodwin, and America Ferrera are the "Fresh Faces" photographed by Annie Leibovitz. The mag is also hosting a "behind the scenes" video of the photoshoot, and a gallery of her past Hollywood photos. However, the mag has cancelled its traditional A-List Oscars bash in solidarity with the writers' strike.

ISLAMISM in the UK: A radical preacher who heckled the British Home Secretary tried to recruit Muslims to fight British soldiers in Iraq and raise money for terrorists, a court has been told. In a video played to the jury, one his co-defendants praised Osama bin Laden and said Islam was a "religion of terrorism."

AL QAEDA, increasingly tamped down in Iraq, is establishing cells in other countries as Osama bin Laden's organization uses Pakistan's tribal region to train for attacks in Afghanistan, the Middle East, Africa and the United States, the US intelligence chief said Tuesday.

YEAR of the RAT: An animal rights group called Monday for China to treat rats with kindness and respect, as millions across the nation begin to celebrate the coming Year of the Rat. "Rats sing, they dream, and they express empathy for others," Coco Yu of PETA's Asia-Pacific branch said in a statement. Occasionally, they cook gourmet food, too. I'm sensing a royalty opportunity for Al Stewart.

ELBOW: The first single for the Manchester combo's next album, "Grounds For Divorce," was on the Tube for a few days before it was yanked, but fortunately, it's a world...wide... web. Might take a moment to load and won't autoplay, but right there for you.

GANG OF FOUR are continuing to record new material. Bassist Dave Allen tells Billboard: "The biggest surprise is that we've been capable of getting back to our roots. A whole bunch that we've done sounds like 'Entertainment!' (their 1979 debut album). It's more aggressive, more angular." Drummer Hugo Burnham is sitting out the sessions due to unnamed health issues. "Hugo's still involved in some ways, but it's a very personal issue that will be discussed at a later date," Allen says.<br clear="none" />

LOUIS XIV stopped by The Current for a chat and mini-set you can stream on demand via MPR.

NICK CAVE: PopMatters takes a long look at "The 21st Century Love Songs of Nick Cave," many of which were written (ironically enough) after Cave turned off his computer and returned to writing in notebooks and with a manual typewriter.

THE DAY THE MUSIC DIED: I again managed to miss the anniversary of the small-plane crash near Clear Lake, Iowa, that killed Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and J.P. Richardson, a/k/a "The Big Bopper." In memoriam, here is Buddy Holly and the Crickets playing "Oh, Boy!" on the Ed Sullivan Show, Richie Valens playing "Ooh, My Head!" and the Big Bopper with his signature, "Chantilly Lace." And that's Threefer Tuesday.

MENOMENA bassist/co-lead vocalist Justin Harris talks to Matt at YANP about album flow, the band's multi-instrumentalists, and more.

PHOSPHORESCENT did the four free songs thing for Daytrotter; three of them are previously unreleased.

LAST.FM has cut a deal with all four major record companies which will give users access to any song they like and stream it for free (three times) thanks to ad revenue that will come from page views and demographically-specific videos.

BRITNEY SPEARS: Lawyers for the pop wreck tried to convince the Commissioner that Britney "feels hatred" toward her dad, doesn't trust him and wants him removed as co-conservator. The Commish wasn't convinced that Andrew Streisand, the second cousin of Babs, was properly retained by Britney, but we learned that the Spears estate is worth 40 million. The end result of the hearing? Jamie Spears is still the co-conservator of Britney's estate, as is Andrew Wallet through Valentine's Day. Sam Lufti is under a restraining order, barring him from contatcting the pop tart. ALSO: Fun rumor of the day? Spears is "on the edge" after discovering sex tapes were stolen from her Beverly Hills home.

PAM ANDERSON is to strip on stage at Paris' Le Crazy Horse cabaret club on February 13 and 14. This was inevitable, wasn't it? Anderson is said to be "in discussions" about whether or not she will appear fully nude in the finale.

ELLE MACPHERSON is the new cougar in town, according to the NY Post's Page Six, which claims the 44-year-old supermodel is dating 21-year-old Vito Schnabel.

COURTNEY LOVE credits Orlando Bloom with helping her to stay off drugs by introducing her to Buddhist chanting.

BOND GIRLS: The best and worst are the subject of a poll from the Daily Mail, and of a similar gallery at Entertainment Weekly. Shirley Eaton/Jill Masterson wuz robbed!

DON'T KNOW MUCH ABOUT HISTORY: Britons are losing their grip on reality, according to a poll out Monday which showed that nearly a quarter think Winston Churchill was a myth while the majority reckon Sherlock Holmes was real.

IRAN accused France of adopting an "unfriendly" position in Tehran's nuclear row with the West, and said that the military base Paris was setting up in the Gulf would harm peace in the region.

IRAQ: US troops killed 15 suspected militants and detained 26 more in raids against AQI north of Baghdad and in Mosul. There were 12 EFP attacks against Coalition Forces in January - the highest monthly total in more than a year. Baghdad is drowning in sewage, thirsty for water and largely powerless, an Iraqi official said on Sunday in a grim assessment of services in the capital five years after the US-led invasion. The "surge" ops are allowing services to be gradually restored. Demand for electricity was likely to outstrip supply for several years, in part because Iraqis were increasingly buying electrical appliances as the security situation improved.

Actually, Groundhog Day was Saturday, when the real Punxsutawney Phil --- the Seer of Seers, Sage of Sages, Prognosticator of Prognosticators, and Weather Prophet Extraordinary -- predicted six more weeks of winter. Other groundhogs differed. According to the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club, Phil has seen his shadow 98 times, and hasn't seen it (predicting an early spring) only 14 times. Phil's track record is hotly disputed, though he's has been right 80 percent of the time over the last ten years. Nevertheless, a crowd of 40000 spent a night of revelry awaiting the sunrise and the groundhog at Gobbler's Knob in the tiny Pennsylvania hamlet that has become known as the "Weather Capital of the World," due in no small part to the movie, which makes every day Groundhog Day.

This is o­ne time where the Internet really fails to capture the true excitement of a movie about a large squirrel predicting the weather. However, you can see the trailer as a refresher.

In 2005, Roger Ebert revisitedGroundhog Day, declaring that the film "finds its note and purpose so precisely that its genius may not be immediately noticeable. It unfolds so inevitably, is so entertaining, so apparently effortless, that you have to stand back and slap yourself before you see how good it really is."

At the other end of the political spectrum, Jonah Goldberg's equally effusive movie meditation grabbed the cover of National Review: "When I set out to write this article, I thought it'd be fun to do a quirky homage to an offbeat flick, o­ne I think is brilliant as both comedy and moral philosophy. But while doing what I intended to be cursory research -- how much reporting do you need for a review of a twelve-year-old movie that plays constantly o­n cable? -- I discovered that I wasn't alone in my interest. In the years since its release the film has been taken up by Jews, Catholics, Evangelicals, Hindus, Buddhists, Wiccans, and followers of the oppressed Chinese Falun Gong movement."

As Phil Connors ultimately observed: "When Chekhov saw the long winter, he saw a winter bleak and dark and bereft of hope. Yet we know that winter is just another step in the cycle of life. But standing here among the people of Punxsutawney and basking in the warmth of their hearths and hearts, I couldn't imagine a better fate than a long and lustrous winter."

WEEKEND BOX OFFICE: Hannah Montana's digital 3-D concert movie crushed the box office, taking in 29 million bucks on 683 screens. That is the biggest win of any film playing over Super Bowl weekend -- including Titanic. And the budget for Hannah Montana was a rumored seven million. The folks at Disney are swimming in Scrooge McDuck's money bin today. You do that by charging 15 bucks per ticket, even for kids, with a one-week limited engagement. Jessica Alba brought in 13 million for The Eye, while the other new releases opened below the Top Ten. Katherine Heigl's 27 Dresses held a respectable third place in its third week, while last weeken's openers all tumbled 50-60 percent. The adorable Juno shot back from seventh to fourth with 110 million in total receipts.

JESSICA ALBA has -- according to the uber-reliable Aussie tab New Weekly -- walked out on her fiancé Cash Warren after a series of explosive fights over her pregnancy, vowing she'll never have another baby. Look for them to be photographed together shortly.

SUPER BOWL ADS: You can watch 'em all via AOL, including the new trailers for Iron Man, Prince Caspian (Narnia) and Wall-E, as well as Beyonce doing the Thriller dance with lizards for Life Water. Alternatively, you can watch and vote for your favorites at Spotbowl through noon on Tuesday.

HOLLYWOOD WRITERS' STRIKE: Informal talks between representatives of Hollywood's striking writers and production companies have eliminated the major roadblocks to a new contract, which could lead to a tentative agreement as early as this week, according to the usual anonymous sources.

CARLA BRUNI is in fact the new first lady of France, according to People magazine. French President Nicolas Sarkozy and the ex-supermodel turned singer-songwriter wed in a civil ceremony Saturday morning morning in Paris.

THE UGLIEST BUILDING EVER: The Ryugyong Hotel in North Korea -- the world's 22nd largest skyscraper -- has been vacant for two decades and is likely to stay that way. It is such an eyesore, the Communist regime routinely covers it up, airbrushing it to make it look like it's open -- or Photoshopping or cropping it out of pictures completely. Pics and video at the link.

SWEE' PEA the border collie was just one of the record-breakers featured on a special edition of the Oprah Winfrey show. You can see Swee' Pea is doing balancing that glass while climbing the stairs at the link.

WHEN LIONS ATTACK, it might just be a case of mistaken identity. But that was probably small comfort to British teacher Kate Drew as the 400-lb beast sank its teeth into her head...

...with the MUSIC of LENNON & McCARTNEY! Both Beatles and non-Beatles tunes, as interpreted in different languages and in styles from pop to jazz to classical for this 1965 TV special. John and Paul introduce some of the segments, which include Sir George Martin, Peter & Gordon, Lulu, Marianne Faithfull, Dick Rivers, Billy J. Kramer & The Dakotas, Cilla Black, Henry Mancini, Esther Phillips, Peter Sellers... and yeah, yeah, yeah, The Beatles. (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7.) BONUS: If you missed it lasttime I posted it, I recommend The Beatnix playing "Stairway To Heaven."

SHE & HIM: Zooey Deschanel & M Ward dropped an advance track, "Why Do You Let Me Stay Here?", to stream or downoad via the 'Gum. Has a bit of a retro feel, but without the obvious chliches.

JOE HENRY: The singer-songwriter talks mostly about his production work with the Detroit Free Press.

SCOTLAND YARD GOSPEL CHOIR -- which is jangly and sorta twee, not gospel -- stopped by KEXP for a chat and mini-set which you can stream (or just the music) via NPR.

ROLLING STONES: A similarly named magazine is showing some of Ethan Russell's fab photos from the band's late 1969 tour (that would end in the ill-fated Altamont festival), plus two vintage stories about the tour and tragedy.

THE RAVEONETTES: The brand spankin' new video for "Candy" is kinda cheap, but the song makes up for it. I'm thinking the burlesque dancers are from the tour Ken King and I saw for the last album.

CAT POWER: Chan Marshall's Jukebox debuted at No. 12 on Billboard's Top 200 Album Chart -- not only her best ever, but the best debut in the 20 year history of Matador Records. She has a new website for the album, which is streaming music via the ol' HM!

THE EDITORS stopped by The Current for a chat and mini-set you can stream on demand via MPR.

BRITNEY SPEARS reportedly has been classified at UCLA as "Gravely Disabled," meaning the patient is unable to take care of basic needs; it is a possible basis for involuntary commitment. Her inner circle, including her estranged mother Lynne, chose to admit her to the UCLA Medical Center because of its experience with treating bipolar disorder. TMZ claims that when admitted, the pop wreck said she was on Adderall, a stimulant used to treat Attention Deficit Disorder, and was taking up to ten laxatives a day. For a time, she was hurling profanities at her parents and staff. The ever-reliable National Enquirer claims Spears had been on a 24-hour meth binge before she was rushed to the hospital. Sources tell PageSIx that Spears' legal team has been instructed by the pop tart's family not to talk to Sam Lutfi. Mama Lynne feels that the biggest problem facing Britney's recovery is the circle of friends she's become involved with and desperately wants to take her daughter home to Louisiana as soon as she's released from the hospital.

HEATH LEDGER: Apparently bowing to pressure from celebrities and Hollywood publicists, Entertainment Tonight and The Insider have decided not to broadcast more footage from a video which shows the late Heath Ledger talking about his use of marijuana at a drug-fuelled Hollywood party, but it is of course posted on the Internet.

NOW SHOWING: This weekend's wide releases are Jessica Alba's horror-thriller The Eye, for which advance reviews were embargoed (I'm guessing they won't be stellar); the fantasy-comedy Over Her Dead Body, which is currently scoring 19 percent on the ol' Tomatometer; and the comedy Strange Wilderness, which wasn't screened for critics at all. There Will Be Blood expands to wide releasse, with its 90 percent score.

CLOVERFIELD director Matt Reeves is in early talks with Paramount to direct a "Cloverfield" sequel, and he has also made a deal with GreeneStreet Films to direct "The Invisible Woman."

BE KIND, REWIND involves Mos Def and Jack Black re-creating movies on erased videotapes, so it's only fair that director Michel Gondry returns the favor by re-creating the official trailer for the movie.

CHUCK and SAMANTHA WHO? Zachary Levi and Christina Applegate, stars of the shows just mentioned, were... wait for it... caught canoodling in a dark dive named Ye Olde Coach & Horses in L.A. Bonus points to Metromix for actually using the word "canoodling."

THE MILITARY and the MEDIA: The Washington Post runs with a story reporting that the Army reached an all-time high of 17.5 suicides per 100,000 active-duty soldiers in 2006. The story fails to mention that the national suicide average is 21.5 per 100,000 for males ages 20 to 34. Oddly enough, the Hartford Courant did the same basic story, with the same basic omission, last year. I applaud the Army's efforts to get a handle on the rise in suicides -- a trend contrary to past periods of combat. I do not applaud newspapers who fail to note how remarkable the troops are with regard to their peers in the civilian sector.

FLOCKE: Knut's successor as official cuddly polar bear cub learns to crawl at the Nuremburg Zoo.